2006 AIChE Annual Meeting
(541a) Mixed Mineral Scale Formation in Low-Pressure Reverse Osmosis Membrane
Authors
In the present work, the impact of mixed minerals scale formation and kinetics on low pressure RO membranes performance was investigated in a laboratory RO system. The model scalants selected for the study were calcium sulfate dihydrate (gypsum) and calcium carbonate. Membrane scaling experiments studies were conducted in a high pressure laboratory plate-and-frame RO system with the capability for real-time visual monitoring of the membrane surface and thus the development of surface crystals. The system was operated in a total recycle mode with the retentate stream continuously microfiltered to trap bulk crystals to ensure surface crystallization as the dominant mode of scale formation [2]. The time evolution of crystal dimensions, crystal morphology and crystal number density were evaluated from digital image analysis. To allow comparison between mixed mineral formation on membrane surface and in bulk solution, gypsum crystal growth with calcium carbonate co-precipitation experiments were also conducted in a batch crystallizer. The kinetics of crystal growth was followed by monitoring calcium ion activity decline and elemental and image analysis of the formed precipitate.
The experimental results revealed that when gypsum was the dominant mineral scalant, the extent of gypsum scaling was reduced with increasing calcium carbonate supersaturation. SEM imaging also indicated alteration of the crystals morphology consistent with the above observation. The reduction in the rate of mineral formation with increasing concentration of carbonate ion indicated that co-precipitation of calcium carbonate competes and interferes with the growth of gypsum both in bulk solution and on the membrane surface. The present study suggests that the optimization of RO operating conditions and the development of scale mitigation strategies must consider co-precipitation kinetics for the specific source water to be desalted.
References:
[1] A. Rahardianto, W.-Y. Shih, R.-W. Lee, and Y. Cohen, J. Membr.Sci., In Press, Corrected Proof (2006).
[2] W.-Y. Shih, A. Rahardianto, R.-W. Lee, and Y. Cohen, J. Membr.Sci., 252 (2005) 253.
[3] P. Dydo, M. Turek, and J. Ciba, Desalination, 159 (2003) 245.
[4] R. Sheikholeslami, Desalination, 154 (2003) 117.